Sonnet 5 is a substantial improvement over Sonnet 4.6 on reasoning, tool use, coding, and knowledge work.
Its performance is close to Opus 4.8, at lower prices.
NEW: Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas just walked through the House side of the Capitol.
He didn’t say why he was here. But told me he was meeting with “nobody.”
I said tomorrow will be a big day at the court. “I guess so,” he responded.
Would he give a sneak peak of decisions? “Nope,” he told me with a chuckle.
61 years of mostly miserable existence…with pockets of highlights…but never got to the top of the mountain. And we still love them. Smh. #DirtyBirds#Falcons#NFL
If it was a normal, functioning DOJ, they should have brought anti trust lawsuit against these memory and storage makers for price gouging. Repurposing consumer grade manufacturing to fulfill the astronomical enterprise demand is cause for investigation. $SNDK $MU $WDC
This young lady, Adellyn, rescues plants that she knows she can save even if they look dead. She goes bargain hunting at Tractor Supply to see how many she can buy for $20. They recognize her and give them to her for free. I love seeing someone her age passionate about what she is doing.
This is real footage from 126 years ago.
What you are watching is the trottoir roulant, the moving sidewalk, built for the great World's Fair in Paris in 1900.
More than a century ago, three years before the Wright brothers would make the first airplane flight, the city built an electric street that carried you across itself while you simply stood there...
It ran in a loop of around three and a half kilometres, raised on a viaduct above the fairgrounds, with nine stations where you could step on and off.
And it had a clever design: two moving platforms side by side, one going at walking pace and one faster, so you could step onto the slow one first, then onto the quick one, and ride the whole circuit in about twenty-six minutes without taking a single step.
Nearly fifty million people came to that fair, and for most of them it was the first time they had ever moved through a place without taking a step.
The very first moving walkway had appeared seven years earlier, at the World's Fair in Chicago in 1893, built by the same designers. But the Paris version was longer, faster, and far more sophisticated, and it was here that the world truly fell in love with the idea.
It astonished people. The thought that the ground itself could carry you felt like magic, like something out of a dream of the future. They even called it the Rue de l'Avenir: the Street of the Future.
Thomas Edison sent a crew to film it, which is why we can still watch it today...
Trump ripped up the walkway between the West Wing and the mansion to replace it with polished African granite carved in Italy. "Paid for by me," he claimed. Except that's not true. Taxpayers paid $689,232, per documents obtained by @michaelscherer https://t.co/7l2bkD0MIH
Ossoff: I never want to hear these two pretend they give a damn about working people again.
Because while hundreds of thousands of Georgians lose their health care, Mike Collins builds Trump a ballroom. They worked harder burying the Epstein files than they ever did lowering your grocery bill.